May pays WWI respects in France with Brexit in background

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British Prime Minister Theresa May and French President Emmanuel Macron are to commemorate their countries’ shared sacrifice in the First World War on Friday, while also discussing the more thorny issue of their post-Brexit relationship.

Macron, who spent the past week touring former battlefields of eastern and northern France, was to meet May at the Thiepval Memorial to the Missing of the Somme, near the Belgian border.

The memorial commemorates 72,337 missing British and South African servicemen who died between 1915 and 1918 in a series of battles along the Somme river, and who have no known grave.

May started the day with a visit to the Saint Symphorien Military Cemetery in Mons, Belgium, where she and Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel laid a wreath at the graves of the first and last soldiers killed on the Western Front.

"A century ago British forces fought side by side with our allies in Europe on the Western Front. Today in France and Belgium we reflect on our shared history, but also look ahead to our shared future, built on peace, prosperity and friendship," May said in a statement.

Following a reception with British and Belgian armed forces members in Mons, May met Macron in Albert, a town in the heart of the Somme region which suffered significant bombardment during the First World War.

They were to hold a working lunch where Brexit is expected to be at the top of the agenda, before laying a wreath at the Thiepval Memorial. The wreath, made for the occasion, will combine poppies and cornflowers, the respective emblems of remembrance for Britain and France.

France has taken a hard line in the Brexit negotiations, with Macron insistent that Britain should not be allowed to negotiate advantages for itself as it withdraws from the European Union.

Negotiators have been racing against the clock to try to agree the outlines of an agreement to settle Britain’s exit that could be approved at an EU summit this month. Macron, whose poll ratings have fallen sharply in recent months, will be hosting dozens of leaders converging on Paris for the 100th anniversary of the end of the Great War.

US President Donald Trump arrives on Friday night and will hold talks with Macron before a lunch with their spouses at the Elysee Palace. Macron will then travel to Rethondes, the clearing in the Compiegne forest where the WWI armistice was signed, for a meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

The meeting in a forest clearing will be highly symbolic of reconciliation between France and Germany, as Rethondes was also the site imposed by Nazi Germany on the French when accepting their surrender in 1940, the Elysee said.

On Sunday morning Macron will host dozens of world leaders, including Russia’s Vladimir Putin, at the Arc de Triomphe in Paris for a remembrance ceremony at the tomb of the Unknown Soldier, 100 years to the day after the war ended.

Later in the day, Macron, Merkel and UN General Secretary Antonio Gutteres will join other world leaders and representatives of civil society, for a peace forum held in the northeast of Paris.

Macron, who would like the peace forum to become an annual event on the lines of the Davos economic forum, and Merkel -- the first to speak at the event -- will underline the importance of multilateralism in the search for peace.

British Prime Minister Theresa May and French President Emmanuel Macron are to commemorate their countries’ shared sacrifice in the First World War on Friday, while also discussing the more thorny issue of their post-Brexit relationship.

Macron, who spent the past week touring former battlefields of eastern and northern France, was to meet May at the Thiepval Memorial to the Missing of the Somme, near the Belgian border.

The memorial commemorates 72,337 missing British and South African servicemen who died between 1915 and 1918 in a series of battles along the Somme river, and who have no known grave.

May started the day with a visit to the Saint Symphorien Military Cemetery in Mons, Belgium, where she and Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel laid a wreath at the graves of the first and last soldiers killed on the Western Front.

"A century ago British forces fought side by side with our allies in Europe on the Western Front. Today in France and Belgium we reflect on our shared history, but also look ahead to our shared future, built on peace, prosperity and friendship," May said in a statement.

Following a reception with British and Belgian armed forces members in Mons, May met Macron in Albert, a town in the heart of the Somme region which suffered significant bombardment during the First World War.

They were to hold a working lunch where Brexit is expected to be at the top of the agenda, before laying a wreath at the Thiepval Memorial. The wreath, made for the occasion, will combine poppies and cornflowers, the respective emblems of remembrance for Britain and France.

France has taken a hard line in the Brexit negotiations, with Macron insistent that Britain should not be allowed to negotiate advantages for itself as it withdraws from the European Union.

Negotiators have been racing against the clock to try to agree the outlines of an agreement to settle Britain’s exit that could be approved at an EU summit this month. Macron, whose poll ratings have fallen sharply in recent months, will be hosting dozens of leaders converging on Paris for the 100th anniversary of the end of the Great War.

US President Donald Trump arrives on Friday night and will hold talks with Macron before a lunch with their spouses at the Elysee Palace. Macron will then travel to Rethondes, the clearing in the Compiegne forest where the WWI armistice was signed, for a meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

The meeting in a forest clearing will be highly symbolic of reconciliation between France and Germany, as Rethondes was also the site imposed by Nazi Germany on the French when accepting their surrender in 1940, the Elysee said.

On Sunday morning Macron will host dozens of world leaders, including Russia’s Vladimir Putin, at the Arc de Triomphe in Paris for a remembrance ceremony at the tomb of the Unknown Soldier, 100 years to the day after the war ended.

Later in the day, Macron, Merkel and UN General Secretary Antonio Gutteres will join other world leaders and representatives of civil society, for a peace forum held in the northeast of Paris.

Macron, who would like the peace forum to become an annual event on the lines of the Davos economic forum, and Merkel -- the first to speak at the event -- will underline the importance of multilateralism in the search for peace.